Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
By the end of the 1930s the carrier had the following routes in operation: Kharkiv–Kyiv, Kharkiv–Odesa, Kyiv–Odesa, Kyiv–Rostov–Mineralnye Vody, Kyiv–Simferopol, Moscow–Leningrad, Moscow–Minsk, Moscow–Odesa, Moscow–Sochi, Moscow–Kuybishev, Moscow–Baku–Tbilisi, Moscow–Simferopol, Moscow–Stalingrad–Astrakhan ...
Opened on 6 May 1980 for Moscow's Summer Olympics, Terminal F, previously Sheremetyevo-2, has 15 jetways and 21 remote aircraft stands. The terminal was designed to service 6 million passengers per year. Until the completion of the original Terminal C, it was the only terminal that serviced international flights.
1.1.2 Busiest international flight routes by origin-and-destination passenger volume (airport pairs) ... Moscow/Sheremetyevo with 830,980. ...
The first passenger flights of the IL-18 (Moscow to Alma-Ata on 20 April 1956) and Tu-114 (Moscow to Khabarovsk on 24 April 1961) were also made from Vnukovo Airport. In 1980, Vnukovo was expanded because of the 22nd Summer Olympic Games. In 1993, Vnukovo Airport became a joint-stock company.
The airline began international flights with the type on 12 October 1956 under the command of Boris Bugayev with flights from Moscow to Prague. The aircraft placed Aeroflot in an enviable position, as airlines in the West had operated throughout the 1950s with large piston-engined aircraft.
In 1992, their efforts led to the airport obtaining international status (Decree of the Government of the Russian Federation dated 13 July 1992 N 1262-r On the opening of Domodedovo Airport (Moscow) for international flights. [4] Bakov left the business in 1994, and Kamenshchik still heads the company. [5]
Moscow: UUDD DME ДМД Moscow Domodedovo Airport: Moscow: UUEE SVO ШРМ Sheremetyevo International Airport: Moscow: UUWW VKO ВНК Vnukovo International Airport: Moscow: UUBW ZIA РНУ Zhukovsky International Airport (Ramenskoye) Moscow: UUMO OSF ОСФ Ostafyevo International Business Airport: Smolensk: UUBS LNX СМЛ Smolensk North ...
Rank Airport Region City IATA code Passengers 2019 Annual growth Rank change 2017–2018; 1: Sheremetyevo International Airport: Moscow Moscow Oblast: Moscow